Friday, June 11, 2021 CapitalPress.com 7 Biden administration to roll back ESA reforms By CAROL RYAN DUMAS Capital Press The U.S. Fish and Wild- life Service and the National Marine Fisheries Service are proposing several changes to Endangered Species Act regulations that would roll back reforms made under the Trump administration. The proposals are the result of an executive order directing all federal agen- cies to review and address agency actions during the last four years that conflict with Biden-Harris adminis- tration objec- tives, such as address- ing climate change. The agen- cies will initi- Kaitlynn ate rulemak- Glover ing to: • Rescind a regulatory definition of “habitat” that limits criti- cal habitat designations to a location that “currently or periodically contains the resources and condi- tions necessary to support one or more life processes of a species.” • Rescind a regulation that allows the Fish and Wildlife Service to exclude federal lands from critical habitat designation based on economic considerations and other factors. • Reinstate the “blanket 4(d) rule,” which extends full endangered species pro- tections to most species only listed as “threatened.” • Prohibit the agencies from considering the eco- nomic impacts and certain other consequences of their ESA listing decisions. • Revise regulations gov- erning interagency consulta- tion under Section 7 of the ESA. While not unexpected, the announcement demon- strates a significant step backward in implementation of ESA and the improved clarity achieved under the last administration, accord- ing to the Public Lands Council and National Cat- tlemen’s Beef Association. “These regulatory revi- sions will not improve out- comes — they will just make the ESA more bur- densome on the people actu- ally working to restore habi- tat and protect biodiversity,” said Kaitlynn Glover, NCBA executive director of natural resources and Public Lands Council executive director. “We are disappointed to see the Biden administra- tion take such a major step backwards on measures that facilitated significant on-the-ground progress by livestock producers, state governments and advocates in recent years,” she said. “Frankly, the motivation behind this rollback is out of touch with how federal reg- ulations impact rural com- munities and seems to have more to do with partisan- ship than the protection and recovery of wildlife,” she said. The agencies are expected to move forward with these rulemakings in the coming months. PLC and NCBA will con- tinue to work to ensure that ESA recognizes the contri- butions of ranchers and vol- untary conservation while being a clear and predictable regulatory mechanism. Cosmic Crisp apple gains market momentum, but still faces challenges By SIERRA DAWN MCCLAIN Capital Press Owyhee Irrigation District Part of Owyhee Reservoir near Adrian, Ore. Owyhee Basin water supplies stay tight By BRAD CARLSON Capital Press Both the amount of water stored in the Owyhee Reser- voir and the flow of the river below it are about one-third below long-term medians. Southeastern Oregon farmer Bruce Corn, who serves on the Owyhee Irriga- tion District Board of Direc- tors, said the Owyhee River basin must get normal snow- pack and runoff next year. “Because of conservation the last few years, people will get through this year on the Owyhee Project,” he said. “But the reservoir will be depleted or close to depleted. We will need average runoff to have an adequate supply for next year.” Corn said conservation measures in recent years, including moves to drip and sprinkler irrigation, are help- ing producers navigate dry conditions and reduced water supply. “In March and April we had virtually no rainfall, and that is contributing to stream- flows of midsummer or late-summer levels happen- ing right now,” he said. “So we are pretty dependent on what is in reservoir storage.” The Owyhee River flows into the Snake River south of Nyssa, Ore. The USDA Natural Resources Conser- vation Service in a June 1 water-supply report said total precipitation in southern Snake basins for the water year ranges from 65-75% of normal. NRCS pegged Owyhee Reservoir storage at 66% of normal. The U.S. Geologi- cal Survey June 7 reported streamflow below the dam at 32.9% lower than the long- term median. NRCS said despite short periods of cool, wet weather, May’s mostly warm, dry conditions led to full snow- melt earlier than normal in most South Snake basins. And as the basins tran- sition to the dry season, it looks highly unlikely total water-year precipitation will recover to normal conditions. NRCS said the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s most recent 30-day outlook pre- dicts above-normal tempera- tures and lower-than-normal precipitation throughout the region. Current conditions are “a big concern because we are going to be pulling hard on what storage we do have,” OID General Manager Jay Chamberlin said. Prolonged dry weather kept river flows well below normal and prompted grow- ers to irrigate early, he said. But for the season so far, “crops are behind, so water demand is behind,” Cham- berlin said. Factors include quick swings between hot and cold temperatures, high winds, and some late May rain. “We’re thinking water demand will pick up in another 10 days,” he said June 7. OID reduced the allot- ment by 25% for custom- ers serviced by the reservoir. Ditches with supplemen- tal pumping rights out of the Snake remain at full allotment. Corn said the Owyhee Basin’s situation is signifi- cantly better than those of the Big Wood and Little Wood in Idaho, and the Klamath and Deschutes in Oregon. NRCS said water-year precipitation in Wood and Lost basins is 60-70% of nor- mal after some improvement in May. Reservoir storage remains well below normal. WENATCHEE, Wash. — Cosmic Crisp apple growers hope the third time’s the charm. Cosmic Crisp, Wash- ington’s new state apple, achieved celebrity status its first year on the market, in 2019. Its sophomore year, 2020, was bumpy — and for many growers, disap- pointing. Now, as the indus- try looks toward the third year, optimism is on the rise, but challenges remain. From the start, Cosmic Crisp was a big gamble: 22 years of breeding and development by Washing- ton State University, $500 million spent by growers planting 13 million trees. So, when FOB, or freight-on-board, prices plunged from $71.86 per 40-pound box in Decem- ber to $43.83 per box this February, the 39% drop led many growers to panic. “I’ve been super disap- pointed with where pricing was this year,” said Andy Handley, a grower in East Wenatchee. Industry leaders say the 2020-21 season was rough for several reasons. Sierra Dawn McClain/Capital Press Cosmic Crisp boxes at McDougall & Sons Inc. Historically, the indus- try’s No. 1 promotional tool for new varieties has been in-store sampling. “With COVID, sampling fell apart,” said Rebecca Lyons, Washington Apple Commission’s international marketing director. Growers say the presi- dential election, racial ten- sions, supply chain disrup- tions, canceled trade shows and overwhelmed retail- ers trying to keep staples in stock also hurt sales last year. But experts say Cosmic Crisp appears to be turning the corner this spring. In March, the indus- try was shipping about 40,000 boxes weekly. Now, Tim Kovis, spokesman for Washington State Tree Fruit Association, estimates the industry ships 48,000 boxes weekly. That’s good progress, though still short of the ideal 80,000-boxes- per-week mark. “Movement has been steady for the past several weeks,” said Jill Burbery, project manager for Propri- etary Variety Management, a Yakima company on con- tract with WSU to manage commercialization. Burbery said she expects the remaining 174,000 boxes in storage will run out by mid-June. March 1, there had been 892,000 boxes in storage. Some growers have already sold out. “We had great interest,” said West Mathison, pres- ident and CEO of Stemilt Growers. “We ran out. I wish we had more.” But prices have remained about static. FOB prices are about the same as in February, said Brian Focht, manager of the Washington Apple Grow- ers Marketing Association. And the average national retail price for Cosmic Crisp, according to Nielsen data, was $2.47 a pound in April and $2.46 in May. Growers are looking to this coming season with both boosted optimism and concerned realism. They’re optimistic because retailers are less distracted, some stores plan to resume taste tests, the industry will expand in Canada, and as trees mature, fruit quality will become consistent. Expected challenges include continued COVID protocols, choosing ideal harvest and market release dates and dealing with wax problems in the warehouse because the variety’s skin is naturally waxy. More lawmakers press DOJ on meatpacker probe By CAROL RYAN DUMAS Capital Press Lawmakers are turning up the heat on the Depart- ment of Justice over its investigation of the four largest meatpackers. The investigation, which began in May 2020, is focused on whether anti- competitive practices have led to the disparity between the prices of live cattle and wholesale beef. “We understand that a thorough investigation can take many months, but it concerns us that farmers, ranchers and the packers themselves have all been left with little direction since the CIDs (civil inves- tigation demands) were issued,” the lawmakers said in a letter to Attorney Gen- eral Merrick Garland. Led by Reps. Michael Guess, R-Miss., and Dar- ren Soto, D-Fla., the bipar- tisan letter signed by 50 other members of Congress requested updates or a final report on the investigation. “As you may know, the price for live cattle in the United States has decreased in the last several years, forcing many small opera- tors to make difficult deci- sions as they strive to stay in business and keep their farms operational,” the law- makers said. “Yet, at the same time, the price of boxed beef has increased significantly, rais- ing consumer prices and widening the gap between live cattle prices — which is a concern for ranchers and consumers alike,” they said. The disparity has been widened by the pandemic and the labor shortages in processing facilities due to enhanced government ben- efits, resulting in continued food supply-chain disrup- tion, they said. “These challenges rein- force the need to ensure that our nation’s farmers, ranch- ers and producers operate in transparent markets, which in turn helps feed Ameri- can families. We ask that the DOJ continue its atten- tiveness to this matter and provide updates of findings to ensure confidence in our commodity markets,” they said. The letter is the latest in a groundswell of law- maker attention to the issue of meatpacker control and price disparity. Last week, a bipartisan group of 28 House and Sen- ate lawmakers sent DOJ a letter saying it’s time for the government to deter- mine whether the “strangle- hold” the large meatpackers have in the processing mar- ket violates U.S. antitrust laws. In May, 16 representa- tives and senators sent a letter to DOJ urging it to continue or conclude its investigation into the meat- packers’ actions during the 2019 fire at a Tyson plant and during the pandemic. National Cattlemen’s Beef Association thanked Guess and Soto for adding their leadership to the effort pushing DOJ to complete its investigation. “The growing motiva- tion in Congress to has- ten the conclusion of the DOJ investigation and take action on the issues plagu- ing our industry’s market- place is the result of grass- roots consensus among cattle producers,” said Ethan Lane, NCBA vice president of government affairs. “Across the country, in sale barns and state affiliate meetings, we’re hearing the same frustration from our members — no matter how the pendulum swings, the leverage always seems to be on the side of the pack- ers,” he said. We have a new crop of materials for the Worker Protection Standard. Protect your workers from pesticide exposure with the WPS. We have a bushelful of materials: brochures, posters and more. To learn everything that applies, go to EPA.gov/pesticide-worker-safety S243335-1